About The Psalter 1912
The Psalter (1912)
The Psalter (1912) is a historic English-language hymnbook published in the early 20th century as a complete metrical Psalter for congregational worship. It is especially associated with Reformed and Presbyterian traditions and represents one of the most important attempts to present the biblical Psalms in metrical, singable English form.
Purpose and background
The Psalter was created to provide churches with a unified collection of:
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Metrical versions of all 150 Psalms
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Carefully matched hymn tunes for congregational singing
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Supplementary hymns for worship services
It developed out of the Reformed tradition of exclusive or near-exclusive psalm singing, where the Psalms were set to meter so they could be sung by congregations rather than read or chanted.
It was produced under the influence of North American Reformed churches, especially in cooperation with the:
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Christian Reformed Church in North America
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Reformed Church in America
Structure of the Psalter
The 1912 Psalter is organized into:
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The Book of Psalms (metrical versions)
All 150 Psalms are paraphrased into English verse suitable for singing. -
Tunes section
Hundreds of hymn tunes are matched with specific meters. -
Doxologies and chants
Added material for liturgical use, including praise responses and worship settings.
Characteristics
The Psalter is known for:
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Strong fidelity to biblical wording (paraphrased, not free poetic interpretation)
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Formal, reverent language
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Congregational singability
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Use of traditional hymn meters (common, long, short meter)
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Emphasis on Reformed theology and worship simplicity
Worship use
The Psalter was widely used in:
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Sunday worship services
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Family worship settings
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Catechism instruction
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Midweek prayer meetings
It became especially important in conservative Reformed communities where Psalm singing remained central to worship life.
Musical importance
Many of the tunes in the Psalter were drawn from:
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Traditional European hymnody
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Genevan Psalm tunes (associated with John Calvin’s Reformation tradition)
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Anglican and Lutheran chorale traditions
This blending created a rich musical heritage that allowed ancient psalms to be sung in a more modern English setting while preserving traditional church music forms.
Legacy
Although later hymnals replaced it in many churches, the 1912 Psalter remains influential. It is still used in some Reformed congregations and has had a lasting impact on psalm singing traditions in English-speaking churches.
It represents a key moment in the history of congregational worship, bridging older psalm-singing traditions with modern hymnody development.